تعبير انجليزي عن حذاء
اسماء الاحذية بالانجليزي
تعبير عن الحذاء بالانجليزي
اسماء الاحذيه وانواعها بالانجليزي
شوز بالانجليزي
احذيه بالانجليزي
معنى حذاء بالانجليزي
اسماء الاحذية النسائية
اسماء الاحذية النسائية بالانجليزي
أنواع الأحذية في اللغة الإنجليزية -
عبارات إنجليزية هامة للتعبير
تعبير بالانجليزي عن التسووق
سماء الاحذية بالانجليزي
اسماء الاحذية النسائية
انواع الاحذية الرجالية
شوز بالانجليزي
انواع الاحذية الرياضية
انواع الاحذية للرجال
معنى حذاء بالانجليزي
حذاء رياضي بالانجليزي
انواع الاحذيه الرجاليه

وز بالانجليزي
اسماء الاحذية بالانجليزي
معنى حذاء بالانجليزي
تعبير عن الحذاء بالانجليزي
احذيه بالانجليزي
حذاء رياضي بالانجليزي
نعال بالانجليزي
بوت بالانجليزي
معنى shoe
اسماء الاحذية النسائية بالانجليزي
شوز بالانجليزي
معنى حذاء بالانجليزي
انواع الاحذية الرجالية
انواع الاحذية الرياضية
انواع الاحذية للرجال
حذاء رياضي بالانجليزي
انواع الجزم النسائيه
انواع الاحذيه الرجاليه
تعبير shoes
تعبير عن الحذاء بالانجليزي
اسماء الاحذية باللغة العربية
اسماء انواع الاحذية
انواع الاحذيه واسمائها
اسماء الاحذيه وانواعها بالانجليزي
اسماء الاحذية بالانجليزي
اسماء الاحذيه بالعربي




Different Types of Womens Shoes - The Vocabulary of Footwear
The terms and vocabulary of the shoe in the lexicon shoes.
Ajoureé: A perforated shoe is a shoe that has open air and leaves your feet breathed.
Après-ski: Après-ski are boots insulating from the cold, which one carries when one does not ski.
Babies: Babies are ballerinas for children or adults that give comfort to the feet.
Babouches:
The saban of the Persian (papus) بابوش, composed of pa (foot) and pus (cover), simply refers to shoe.
It is a traditional leather shoe from the Arab-Muslim world. It is also said belgha
Ballerinas: A ballerina is a feminine shoe closed and neckline with rounded ends and often flat sometimes possessing a very thin heel or no heel and inspired by the dance slipper.
Sneakers: refers to the multivalent sport shoe
Boats: Boat shoes are shoes originally designed for sailing. They look a bit like moccasins because they are leather and do not hold the ankle. In order not to mark the deck of the boats, their sole is soft and the heel little more.
Boots: boots or booties.
Boots: Thick boot with long collar: according to the different uses for which it is intended, this collar can go up to the calf, up to the knees or to the thigh. The boot can have a utilitarian or aesthetic function.
Boots: Small boot, the stem of which rises above the ankle.
Ankle boots: Type of boots with buttons, elastic or laces.
Cavaliere: A boot, a high shoe covering the foot and calf, usually made of leather or rubber, traditionally used for riding. It is also very popular in the world of fashion.
Chanel: pumps invented by Coco Chanel in 1957.
Charentaises: The Charentaise is a sort of felt slipper originating in the Charente region.
Charles IX: is a child ballerina with a bridle on the kick, closed by a button or a buckle.
Chukka Boots: are leather or suede boots with leather soles (but can sometimes be rubber), and open lacing with two or three eyelets. The name chukka comes perhaps from the game of polo, which is usually played in six periods or "chukkas".
Tapes: a type of light shoe, similar to flip-flops (in some French islands they are identified as tap dancing)
College: is the French version of the penny loafer, a moccasin with a stylized leg. It is aimed at a younger clientele.
Compensated: is a shoe whose sole is very thick (several centimeters),
 Thigh boots: is a boot that goes up to the crotch.
Cut out: Shoe leaving the heel apparent
Derby, Derbies:
Derby shoes are low shoes, and are one of the two most popular models of men's shoes.
The Derby shoe has an open lacing: the laces are placed on the inserts, which can be lifted.
Pumps:
A court shoe is a light, feminine shoe, discovered and most often with a fine sole. This shoe is called neckline because it reveals the instep.
Its name comes from the Italian scarpino (small shoe)
In Quebec, the term court shoes does not exist and is replaced by high heels.
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Espadrilles: A sneaker is a lightweight canvas shoe with a hemp cord or woven spoon sole, traditional in several hot regions of the world.
Knee pads: Knee pads are boots that go above the knee.
Ghillies: The ghillies or soft shoes are slippers used in Irish and Scottish dance. In Ireland, ghillies are worn only by women, men wearing slippers close to jazz slippers. The ghillies look a bit like ballet slippers.

 Loafers: or moccasin: a low, supple, light, with or without lace, shoe made of skin or leather. Etymologically, moccasin derives from the Algonquian word makasin and from the proto-Algonquian word maxkeseni.
Low boots: are boots, often with heel, that stop just below ankle.
Mary Jane: Ballerina featuring a bridle on the instep, with heel (as opposed to the "baby" that is flat heel).
Jellyfish:
A jellyfish:
A historic form of sandal is the French model in soft PVC transparent - originally a simple galoche lined with PVC - created in Puy-de-Dôme in 1946 by Jean Dauphant, cutler in the hamlet Les Sarraix, from where his name "la Sarraizienne" adopted in 1962. He had the experience of bakelite by his production of knives with a plastic handle. After the war, the leather is rare, he imagines a cheap sandal created with soft plastic, with the resistant and non-slip sole with its pimples, which the inventor thought as work shoe, all terrain, resistant to water and easy to maintain, destined primarily for French West Africa and the various overseas territories, which explains why 80% of the production of the first years was exported outside Metropolitan France. The first models were not totally plastic, including metal pieces in the form of rivets, allowing to fix the flange to the soles.
Moccasins: The moccasin is a low, supple, light, with or without lace, made of skin or leather. Etymologically, moccasin derives from the Algonquian word makasin and from the proto-Algonquian word maxkeseni.
Molière: shoe that includes a tip attached to the front.
Mules: The mule is a type of lightweight indoor or outdoor shoe with or without heel that leaves the back of the foot uncovered. The mules are always designed to be light and comfortable.
 Barefoot: light shoe partially covering the foot
Slippers: The slipper is a slipper without a rod and without heel, made of light and flexible material (wool or felt)
Penny Loafers: is a moccasin from the 1930s
Richelieus: Type of city shoe with laces at the closed lacing and a slightly rising part up to the ankle. The front of the shoe is directly sewn to the sides of the shoe.
Clogs: A hoof is originally a shoe made by digging and lightening a piece of wood so that the foot can slip in. The hoof appeared between 1480 and 1520 and experienced a rapid development in the populations of France North, West, East, Brittany, Flanders and the Netherlands, in the Rhine and Moselle countries, in the Western Alps (Aosta Valley), spreading on the north- west of the Germanic Roman Empire to Denmark.
Salomé:
A salome is a closed and low-cut shoe with one or more straps that hold the foot and pass in a perpendicular and central tie from the upper.
The typical children's classical salomes are made of blue or brown leather, have a thin thong and a slender tie forming a "T" and attached by a buckle, a wide and rounded upper with a perforation pattern, a low heel, and a stitched crepe outsole in the upper. In boys, salomés are traditionally worn with socks, short panties, and shirt.
Sandals:
A sandal is, in the most general sense:
a lightweight shoe, like a sneaker
or open like the wooden sandal with which the Japanese getas approach.
 Santiags: A santiag (or cowboy boot) refers to a specific boot style, historically worn by cowboys. It has a high heel, a tip that can go from round to pointed, a high upper and traditionally has no laces. Santiags are mainly made from cowhide leather, but they can also be made from exotic skins such as alligator, ostrich, elk, bison, snake, lizard, elephant, buffalo and others.
 Sneakers:
Sneakers are those vintage sports shoes whose use has been diverted and that are all the rage at the moment.
These shoes were designed for the practice of sport and reappear today as a retro, nostalgic fashion phenomenon of the past.
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Shoes:
A shoe is a shoe that covers the foot without rising higher than the ankle and the sole of which is made of a rigid material.
In French of France, the term "shoe" refers exclusively to a shoe with rigid sole covering generally the foot without rising higher than the ankle. The terms "shoe" and "shoe" are not interchangeable: any shoe is a shoe, but everything that shoes is not a shoe.
Spartiates: Sandals with larnières
Stiletto: Pumps with a fine heel of more than 10 cm.
The stiletto remains today one of the most fashionable shoes.
 Tennis:
The term sports shoe refers to a wide range of shoes designed for sport, more or less strongly adapted to a particular sport such as climbing, football or cycling.
In France, the words basketball or tennis are used to designate the multivalent sports shoe, whereas in Quebec, it is the term espadrille that prevails in this use, but there is also godasse1 and the anglicism running shoe.
 Tongs: Tongo, tongo or barefoot, also known as gougoune in Quebec or simply sandal, slache in French-speaking Belgium but more particularly in Brussels, or savate or tap in overseas France, is a shoe made up of " a sole on which are fixed two Y-shaped flanges whose vertical strap (the "stick" on which the Y rests), fixed on the sole, separates the big toe from the rest of the toes of the foot.
Walkers: Women's shoes, light sport type, generally with lace-up closure and boot heel
Wellington: Waterproof boots that often rise to below the knee.


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